The proposed State Senate District 20 - covering Crown Heights, Sunset Park, and, um... a bunch of side streets between 4th and 5th Avenues.

The proposed Assembly and State Senate districts for elections beginning this November were released yesterday. No one was very happy, especially with the Senate districts.

Queens Councilman Peter Vallone, Jr. called District 12 a “baby alien popping out of a stomach.”

Councilman Lew Fidler, who is running to replace Carl Kruger in a March 20 special election but has has district boundaries redrawn to put his house in Minority Leader John Sampson’s district in November, called the process “disgustingly partisan.”

Governor Cuomo, through a spokesman, promised a veto.

BK Southie, which earlier this week proposed eliminating eight Senate districts (citing general economic conditions and legislative dysfunction), is now suggesting we eliminate the State Senate altogether. OK, we’re just kidding this time, but seriously, District 20. Seriously.

As expected, a new, 63rd district has been proposed, a move largely seen as a move by Senate Republicans to protect their slim majority. Former Mayor Ed Koch complained, “I am disappointed in this result and in the dishonorable lawmakers who openly pledged to do things differently this year, and then reneged when it wasn’t to their political advantage,” specifically referring to a pledge made by legislators in both parties to his movement to allow for redistricting independent of the Assembly and Senate. The same Rochester Democrat & Chronicle article quoted a NYPIRG spokesman saying population deviations exceeded a 3% good-governance guideline in 50 of the 63 districts – only 19 of the 62 districts exceeded such guidelines 10 years ago.

If there’s a silver lining for Bay Ridge and Dyker Heights, its that Senate Districts 22 and 23 – currently held by Republican Marty Golden and Democrat Diane Savino, respectively – aren’t gerrymandered… much more than they have been for the last ten years. Continue reading »

 

Notes of event this week:

 

An early evening portrait of the Regina Pacis Rectory.

If you would like a photo considered for inclusion in our Seen In Photos series, please e-mail brian@bksouthie.com.

 

Household trash - ur doin' it wrong

Two weeks ago, the Home Reporter and Sunset News reported that seven-day trash pickup is to resume on the commercial avenues in Bay Ridge and Dyker Heights – Fort Hamilton Parkway and 3rd, 4th, 5th, and 13th Avenues. The Department of Sanitation claims the move will not cost them any more money. The Community Board 10 District Manager, Josephine Beckmann, told the Home Reporter that the new DoS plan was promising.

Contrast that news from this bit from the Bensonhurst Bean yesterday – 18th Avenue from 65th Street to 75th Street (former Santa Rosalia country) remains trashcan-less, much to the dismay of merchants along the strip. Continue reading »

 

“What a f—ing scumbag.” That was what one pro-bike lane blogger had to say about Councilman Domenic Rechia stopping a proposed bike lane on Bay Ridge Parkway in its tracks. The headline from The L Magazine called Recchia a “lunatic local pol.” Meanwhile The New York Post, which was described by The L as writing with the “tinge of delight”, was pretty straight forward in their short article on the matter. The Post called the bike lane controversial, which is accurate. While I’m not sure there was “strong opposition” as the News Corp. owned newspaper described it, there doesn’t exactly seem to be strong support for bike lanes in South Brooklyn either.

What seemed to infuriate biked lane proponents most of all was what Recchia had to say on his blog about the matter: Continue reading »

 

Silive.com, the Staten Island Advance’s blog, reports that Councilman James Oddo (R-Mid-Island/ Brooklyn) is pitching a change in New York City’s budget. He says the new approach will save the city from cutting essential services such as fire and education. Currently, city-wide candidates, if willing to abide by certain fund-raising restrictions, may request that the city match campaign funding received from private donors. Oddo proposes cutting matching funds from the city’s Campaign Finance Board “from the current 6-1 to 2-1″.

There is a question, in addition to how much money this measure would actually save in a non-election year (pointed out by reader Lisanne!), as to how this could affect the city’s democratic process. It may prevent future newcomers with few donors, or candidates from poor districts (Oddo’s district has some of, if not the highest per capita income in the city) from competing against incumbents with deeper pockets. States and municipalities across the country are in a budget crisis, leaving the possibility of across-the- board cuts to quickly become a question of, not yes or no, but how much.

Coucilman Oddo represents the 50th Council District, which includes a large swath of central Staten Island, as well as parts of Dyker Heights, Bay Ridge and Bensonhurst.

silive.com: Staten Island City Council members Oddo and Ignazio offer city a plan to save plenty of dollars

 
Looking towards the rear of Jamie Lynn’s dining room

Last weekend my girlfriend and I had the chance to try a restaurant named Jamie Lynn’s Kitchen. We thought the interior, with its funky mismatched furniture and painted brick, was both warm and welcoming. Between its looks and eclectic menu, Jamie Lynn’s would fit in well with many eating establishments that have opened up in Brooklyn these past few years. Well, except for one thing.

Continue Reading at Wandering NYC

 

Suzanne Corso: MyFoxNY.com

Aw, man, I totally missed this. That’s why I get for not slavishly following my Facebook feed. But hey, Suzanne Corso was at Boulevard Books and Cafe in Dyker Heights last night promoting her new book, Brooklyn Story. Via Examiner.com: “The story is one woman’s journey from her shackled life in Brooklyn towards a promise of paradise that awaits her in Manhattan. Corso states that Brooklyn Story is more than 20 years in the making and is already in the process of becoming a motion picture.”

Here’s a video of Corso on Fox 5 yesterday morning.

 

The first installment of the 2010 Holiday Lights photo series is here! This year, we’re leading off with the epicenter of holiday light displays, Dyker Heights. It’s like the Downtown North Pole over here, right down to the traffic. The full photo set continues below the fold.

Do you have any photos you want to contribute? For the next two weeks, we’ll be posting photos of holiday decorations from all across South Brooklyn. If you want to contribute, you can e-mail your photos to tips@bksouthie.com, OR you can add them to the group’s brand new Flickr photo pool.

To give you an idea of how elaborately decorated the homes in this part of the neighborhood are, I would describe this impressively festive home as modestly decorated. Continue reading »

 

Egbert Benson was one of the Founding Fathers of the United States

Have you ever wondered how Bensonhurst got it’s name? Before Bensonhurst became a neighborhood of semi-detached houses and apartment buildings it was farmland, and the Benson family was one of its largest landowners. Two of the most prominent and interesting members of the family were Egbert and Arthur Benson.

Continue Reading at Wandering NYC

All content © 2009-2012 Brian Hedden unless otherwise noted. All rights reserved. For more, see Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha